linage Jon PORTLAND, OREGON SATURDAY, JANUARY 16, 1504 THE OREGON DAILY AN C. C. JACKSON PabltohaA mrf evening (except Sunday) at The Journal Building, rifth and OFFICIAL. PAPER OF THE CITY OF BRAKES ON THE WHEELS IHIS dear old comfortable . fatalistic philosophy which accepts every evil v' as beyond remedy simply because It exists, of course suits the fos- , sllixed Oregonlan In school and other affairs which are ' beginning: to feel the quickening: touch of modern ln k t lences and progress. It Is so much easier to let things ' drift, so much more comfortable to accept things as they are, so much more lascinating to niae our neaas in me sand and, not seeing ourselves, fancy we are not seen, to ' live as a vegetable rather .than as a human being and to placidly anchor In the eddies of, life rather than to develop muscle and strength and character through the rude but fetlngs with the waves of progress and advancement. "" It is the Spanish spirit of the manafia, the putting off till the morrow which never comes, which, transplanted to ' American shores breeds paralysis, arrests development - and cripples enterprise. It Is the spirit which rests con tent with the progress which the last generation has made ' and accents what was then done as the high water mark . oi numan acmeveineni. il is wie bjjhh which wuuiu measure what It has done by Itself rather than to measure '.it by the highest point, of human achievement realized : elsewhere. It Is the spirit which Is Impervious to the In tellectual evolution of modern-life, which, terror stricken; " regards every new idea as revolutionary if not actually . anarchistic, which would draw- a deadline about the state and say to human progress, "Thus far shalt thou go and 1 no farther." ,..-' , , i It Is for this spirit which the fossilized Oregonlan news . spirit For 60 years It has stood in the way of progress, It has hamstrung enterprise, it has levied tolls at , the threshold of the city and It has throttled every generous .impulse, enterprise and undertaking. The harm which it ' has done to Oregon, the false impressions of Its people and ' their purposes which it has scattered broadcast, the miasma of its hatred, its bigotry, its narrowness, its moral and mental delinquencies and obliquities can never be measured In words or mitigated by a lifetime of devotion. Wa have here one of the verv grandest of all the nt.atea.in the American union, a state of almost measureless natural resources, but after half a century of effort the surface of it has been scarcely scratched and Us population Is less than a third of what It legitimately should be. And why? Every progressive man and woman In this ' to the monopolists Oregonlan which, fearing rivalry and the keen competition which goes with it, has sandbagged and disheartened men of substance, character and enter prise so that no resident until' within the past few years mentioned Oregon or , Portland without an apologetic preface.. ,'.; ". . . ' , - ! , But happily for everyone the specter.;, that so long haunted the -pathway of progress no longer appals, The bold, enterprising and progressive 'spirit of the American people is beginning to assert itself here in Oregon, The time has gone by never to return when any incident may be regarded as closed because the Oregonlan has Anally pronounced-upon it. The time for free public questions came with the advent it has come to stay, .Each and every man is now en j titled to his hearing and what each man has to say Is , discussed upon its merits. The progressive man need no longer hide his diminished head. He may come out into .the open and have his say. He may even criticise the .public schools without being ostracised from human so ciety and perhaps drawn and quartered for. his temerity. He may say that there are public school needs that have 'not yet been recognised and boldly uphold his theory. i He may, too, suffer defeat but it is with him as it Is with The Journal defeat no longer means annihilation. If he , believes he Is right he will arise and go at It again, knowing that sooner or later his sincerity will count , and that there Is a great body of modern people here In j Portland who are not willing, indeed would shame to rest upon their oars,' In a matter of such grave consequence t as the public schools and who will never be satisfied .until the modern spirit has touched that great institution ' and brought it In fact as well as in claim up to the highest ' attainable standard. Even that hitherto sacred subject, the Oregonlan Itself. ;o longer escapes merited criticism and thrice merited , demulatlon. Better than ever before are appreciated its malign influences upon the state and upon the indi t vldual character of its people. Better than ever before is realized that policy of aelflsh repression, that lack of sin- cerlty and Intellectual conviction which at one time or an- other has put It upon every side of every public question . that has ever been up' for discussion. Better than ever do ' they understand the erratic inconsistencies of Its course , in so often flying in the face of decency, In Its malignant i j vi ,iiaij nuiiz wuitii i cBjjeciuuie people hold sacred, in doing for pay so many lowlived and des picable things which the very scavengers of the public press would turn from in disgust and loathing. The SAKHA BTZZJb rVBXEO , TOIWAXO, ; Sockefelltc Is Back of Him and a Tea- Million-Dollar Campaign Tana. Washington Correspondence N. Y. Press. Positive evidence of a Hanna-ROcke-feller bureau at work s gainst the nomi nation of President Roosevelt has come to light here by the receipt by most .Republican senators and members of congress of copies of editorials from a Cincinnati newspaper declaring against the expediency of the president's candi dacy. All these clippings came from Indianapolis, but they bear no name ex cept that of the Press Clipping Bureau. The last batch to be distributed at i the., capital contains t a two-column edi torial from the Cincinnati paper, and their wide distribution has caused much comment today. Eehelby, the editor who Is credited with writing these edi torials, declared against the president several weeks ago, when his first edi torial was reprinted tar and wide. This newspaper Is a Republican paper, so called, although it is known to be con trolled by .John R. McLean, who. by the way, also controls the flnancpg'of pprry Heath's newspaper In Salt Lake City. Heath formerly held a position with the Cincinnati paper. Other evidences of the strength of the Hanna movement In (Ohio have been en besides the activity of the mysterious clipping bureau there. . It Is evident1 that Henna's friends still are seeking to have him announce him self as a candidate for the nomination ' for president. ., A prominent Republican Is authority for the statement that he would take m contract to raise a campaign fund of , r.t least $10,000,000 fur Hanna's candi dacy should he be nominated for nresl dent. 'Wall street 1 pretty poor Just now, too," he exclaimed, "but we would know where to go for ' all necessary funds." It Is recalled In this connection that there was -an Important conference of prominent 1 financiers in Newt York INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER' PUBLISHED BY JOURNAL PUBLISHING CO. OF PROGRESS public realizes now as never before the distinction be tween occasional mild denunciation of vices in public, which are secretly and powerfully sustained In private. It may take them longer to understand how, for Instance, HarvpW. Scott, editor of the' Oregonlan and president of the Lewis and ciaric lair, can nave tne xace 10 go De fore the senate and house committees, pleading for an ap propriation, while at the same time confessing, as he. has done privately In Washington, that he is opposed to the whole scheme of the fair. But after all there Is nothing very remarkable about them. Now as always the Ore gonlan and Its editor may proudly claim that If they have been Inconsistent they have at least been consistent In their inconsistency may freely demand OREGON'S PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE. IT IS AT LEAST indicative of the new, aspiring and ' courageous spirit of the Democratic party of the state that It puts Itself in the very forefront of the national political movement by announcing a local choice for the presidential nomination. Fortunately, too, " that choice rests upon a man who so singularly enjoys the respect, admiration and good will of those who know .him, re gardless of their politics. ' ' . Governor George Earle Chamberlain has behind him a record of unbroken no one else cared to tackle that have usually come to Chamberlain. ; In the line of what be considered to be his duty he has never avoided an emergency or shrunk back from a forlorn hope. In the face of it all he has never failed in a, political battle and on the very heels of the achievement of the apparently impossible, when he grasped the district attorney prise in this county; he gathered him self together, at the behest of his party, and landed him self in the governor's chair which he now so ably fills. ' It is not surprising, therefore, that his friends, and ad mirers believe that he has reached the national stature In the great game of politics or that the mention of his name in that connection should arouse ; the hearty en thusiasm and stimulate the fighting spirit of a. party which has existed since the organization of the government and which is destined to live until the far distant day when popular government perishes from the face of the earth. ""A better time could not Te chosenT" There Is ho man anywhere who stands forward so conspicuously the choice of the national party There are favorite the whole nation. It and pen field to which representative men everywhere may reasonably aspire and where friends of men of the character, achievements and Intellectual qualities of Gov ernor Chamberlain are presented with opportunities which may well Inspire them to prodigies of valor and new heights of intellectual endeavor , - - discussion of all a matter of of The Journal and Oregon country, . engineers for some river and harbor fa man without prejudices and who is ready to consider every project on Its downright merits. 1 He recognizes that there 1 a west as well as an east coast to the country and we venture to say that there are few men more familiar with the river and harbor conditions of the 'Pacific coast, more fully alive to the importance of the majestic Columbia as a vast artery in the expanding westward trade or who has a broader grasp of the in creasing significance of Pacific coast harbors in the light of the building of the interoceanlc canal and our ter ritorial expansion In the orient. Oregon has every reason to be pleased with this pro motion and it extends the new chief the assurances,' of Its moBt distinguished consideration. The pension bill to come before the house and senate, Introduced by Dolllver of Iowa and Calderhead of Kansas, provides that a pension of f 12 per month be given every survivor of the civil war who served in the army 90 days, or to his widow, provided she was married before June 27, 1890. I If this bill goes through a large slice of public money will be paid out monthly to men and women who have done absolutely nothing to deserve It. No man or woman who can be shown to have adequate means of support, and no man or woman who is strong and able bodied should be allowed a pension from the government. , Charity, whether disbursed by the govern ment or from a private source, Is demoralizing to the self respeot and self man must vote for the party who gives him a pension, and It Is therefore in the nature of a bribe. The next step will probably be to- pension all sons of veterans, alT5 grandsons, who are over 21 years of age. ' ' about two years ago, when It was de cided to weaken the Roosevelt adminis tration In every possible way. That the president might be held responsible for party defection, it was agreed at that time not to make any contribution to the Republican congress campaign last year, as It was desired that the Repub lican should lose the house as a fur ther reitection upon the administration in power. Perry Heath at that time was the accredited representative of the Hanna boom with the Rockefeller interests. Fortunately, however, a Republican ma jority was elected in the house with out Wall-street contribution, and the president s popularity in other ways has been so clearly attested that Hanna has withheld his personal indorsement of the on m pa iff n of his friends and business associates In his favor. Only Hanna's tefuaal to announce his candidacy ' has kept these interests in check. One of the paragraphs in the editorial in iuetion Is a statement made by Jhhips O. Blaine. It refers evidently to Hanna, and Is as follows: "It Is the law of American politics that no man can make himself a candidate for presi dent, and no man can prevent hltneelf from being a candidate for president.' xotsi oar bxsss. In the little Island of Laysan of the Hawaiian group, which has no human inhabitants, bird life Is so dense that the various species have ecpnomlzed space by building their nests one above the other. The similarity of these tiers of nests to the flats In tall apartment houses is quite marked. For example, the petrel and the wedge-tailed shear water live in burrows which compare with an apartment house ' basement. Above them dwell the gray-backed tern and the sooty tern. Higher still in bushes the red-tailed tropic bird and the Christmas Island shearwater have their apartments. Higher still In shrubs the JOURNAL. mo. r, carrou. TamMll - streets, Portland. Oregon. PORTLAND and such praise as this deserves they as they Tlchly merit. ' . political success. It is the jobs which as to obscure all other aspirants. sons of states but no favorite sons of is therefore, as seldom before, a free THE NEW CHIEF OF ENGINEERS. TAHE CONFIRMATION, of Col: Alexander McKenzie I as brigadier-general . and chief of , engineers, Is great personal moment to the whole General McKenzie,. as acting , chief of years, js perfectly familiar with the conditions of the whole country. He la reliance of the recipient. Moreover a Laysan finch and the miller-bird build their homes. The loftier branches of trees are filled with the red-footed booby, the man-o'-war bird and the Hawaiian tern. Naturalists who vlBlted the Islands last year frequently crushed through the roofs of the petrel burrows, sinking to the knees in these subterranean bird homes. It was necessary in walking about to exercise great care lest nests and eggs and young of all sorts of birds be trampled upon. , A writer in the Scientific American says: "In collecting bird skins I have found Innumerable air. cells, forming a most delicate and wonderful network, between the body and the skim In the pelican, one or our largest birds, this network of cells practically .covered the whole body and was very noticeable. Nowf these cells work automatically, like uie lungs or like the circulation of the blood, being filled with or emptied of hot air, according to the purpose of the . bird to rise, float or descend, then surely we can : better , understand the ease with which birds seem to sustain themselves in the air during their long nights." . , The white tern has the curious habit of never bringing less than two fish at a time to Its young. It carries the flsh crosswise In Its bill and sometimes re turns from Its excursions with no less than four flsh thus carried. It l 'easy enough to understand how it captures the first fish, but naturalists are unable to -comprehend how the bird manages to retain it while securing additional ones.' Its ability to hold three flsh In Its bill and still capture a fourth la particularly puzzling. Everything Bald. From the Washington Star. Having already declared Mr. Rocks feller the superior of Hhakeepeare, It is difficult to see hew the Chicago unl verslty is going to find anything to say as a suitable recognition of his further gift or 12,000,000. Famous Sermon From the. Bible St. Matthew 14:1-83. . Herod's opinion of Christ. Wherefore John Baptist was beheaded. Jesus departeth into a desert place, where lie feedcth five thousand men with Ave loaves and two fishes. He walk eth on the sea to his disciples, and ' ' landing at Oennesaret, - healeth the ' sick by the touch of the hem of his garment. ' At that time Herod the tetrarch heard of the fame of Jesus, And said unto his servants, This Is John the Baptist; he is risen from the dead; and therefore mighty works do shew forth themselves in him. For Herod had laid hold on John, and bound him, and put him In prison f oi Herodlas' sake, his brother Philip's wife. For John said unto him, . it is not lawful, for thee to' have her. r , And when he would have put him to death, he feared the multitude, because they counted him as a prophet. . But when Herod's birthday was kept the daughter, of Herodlas danced before them, and pleased Herod. Whereupon he promised with an oath to give her whatever she would ask. And , she, ' before Instructed of het mother, said, give me here John Bap tist's head in a charger. And the king was sorry: neverthelesi for the oath's sake, and them which aaf with him at meat, he commanded it to be given her. , And he sent and beheaded John In the prison. t And his - head was brought In a charger, and given to the damsel: and she brought It to her mother. .,. , And his disciples came, and took up the body, and buried it, and went and told Jesus When Jesus heard of it, he departed thence by ship Into a desert place apart: and. when the people had heard thereof, they followed him on foot out of the cities. . , And Jesus went forth, and saw a great multitude, and was . moved with com passion toward them, and he healed their sick, And when It was evening, his dis ciples came to' him, saying, This is a desert place, and the time is now past; send the multitude away, that they may go Into the villages, and buy themselves victuals. But Jesus said unto them. They need not depart; give ye them to eat. And they say unto? him, We have here but five loaves, and two fishes. He said, Bring, them hither to me. And he commanded the multitude to sit down qn the grass, and took the five- loaves, "and "the "two " fishes, " and looking up to heaven, . he blessed, and brake, and gave the loaves to his dis ciples, and the disciples to the multi tude. And they did all eat, and were fitted: and they took up of the fragments that remained 13 baskets full. ' And they that had eaten ""were about 5,000 men, beside women and children. And straightway Jesus . constrained his disciples to get into a ship, and to go before him unto the other side, while he sent the multitudes away. -. And when he had sent the multitudes away, he went up into a mountain apart to pray: and when the evening was come he was there alone. . But the ship was now in the midst of the sea, tossed with waves: for the wind was contrary. . . And in the fourth watch of the night Jesus went unto them, walking on the sea. ' .. And when the disciples saw him walk ing on the sea, they were troubled, say ing. It is a spirit; and they crHd out for fear.- But straightway Jesus spake unto them, saying, Be of good cheer; it Is I; be not afraid. And Peter answered him and said. Lord, if it be thou, bid me come unto thee on the water. . And he said,: Come. . And when Peter was come down out of 1 the ship, ; he waiaea on tne water, to go to Jesus. But when he saw the wind boisterous. he was afraid; and beginning to sink, hi cried, saying, Lord, save me. v And immediately Jesus stretched forth Ijls . hand, and caught him, and said unto him, O thou of little faith, wherefore didst thou doubt? And when they were come into the ship, the wind ceased. Then they that were in the ship came and worshipped him, saying, Of a truth thou art the Son of God. And when they were gone Over, they came into the land of Gennesaret. And when the men of that place had knowledge of him, they sent out Into all that country round about, and brought unto him all that were diseased; And besought him that they might only touch the hem of his garment; and as many as touched were made perfectly wnoie. SIVOVXAXXTZSS. What' are presumably the largest string beans 'In the world may be seen growing In the gardens of a resident of Pasadena, Cal. They range from 30 ta 42 lnnha In tAiith nnA ,v,nn half an inch in width. They .are not onlyK - ..w.hbv ., enormously large, but they make a de lightful table " delicacy when cut and stewed and prepared with cream and but ter. The vines bear profusely, and the beans are so large that one of them is more than a single person can com fortably manage. These beans are of the aristocratic species, and ' do not claim alliance with the common string bean. California botanists class them as be longing to the genus Dollchos, but owing to their great length they are more pop ularly Known as "yara beans." The plants are natives of China and Japan and the seeds were sent to California from Japan. Fear of microbes seems to have spread to the possessors of old furniture, which during a long life and unknown experi ences may have colleoted the germs of disease, : Recently a cautious lady in London who had been studying the medi cal warnings Inherited a Sheraton table. She would not . admit It to her house, but sent It off to a cabinet maker's with orders that an exact repliua be .made, the original table being offered in pay ment. If this lady's craze for new and Innocuous furniture - spreads, v there should be good times In store for the cabinetmakers, as well as for collectors who prefer the risk of microbes to the certainty of shoddy. . T .Professor Lombroso, as the result of his observations On left-handed and left sided people, finds that among 1,000 sol diers and operatives the proportion of left-handed people is 4 per cent among the men and 6 to 8 per cent among me women. .Among criminals the quota of left-handed was found to be more than tripled in men and more than quintupled among women. Genesis.' Arthur Gibson Hull in The Reader. Between his palms the Potter twirled The patient clay. . . Damp'wlth his splttje, lightly hurled : It then awsy. . Far down the void of black-brenisted ' Night; Betwixt the lean Moon and the sodden ' light Of a chill, dead Dawn, it fell. Ptold, , tne woriat . AOS OUT or WALL STKEET. Clerk Suing for a Check Which Bags Oot But Forgot to Tun Over. From the New 'York' American. ' Wall street practically has lost one of its most Interesting characters. Rus sell Sage, although still Insisting upon visiting hts office once or twice a week, has departed from his lifelong habit of arriving there dally with clock-like reg ularity, . regardless of weather condi tions, and in face la now seen in Wall street at infrequent intervals. He has gradually withdrawn from participation in great financial affairs at the earnest solicitation of' His friends and Mrs. Bage, but the trusted employes who have served him many years still handle the loan business on the stock exchange. Mr, Sage, who Is 87 years old, spends most of his time In his new Fifth avenue home, and is said to be In his usual state of health.' . ' With the news of Mr. Sage's retire ment . comes the statement, that he is determined to fight a judgment for 12,840 rendered in favor of K. CM. Rand, a former clerk of his, by Justice Dugro la the supreme court. - Techni cally, Mr. Rand's suit was against the Iowa Central railroad, of which' Mr. Sage la the principal stockholder. Three' years ago, when Rand was In Mr. Sage's office, he performed valuable services for the Iowa Central and' put in a bill for 12,000. According to Rand, Mr. Save was at the meeting of the board of directors that passed on his claim. , . ( :V,i , , t v'. "Certainly we will allow it." said one of the directors, 'Mall Rand a, check; he's a good fellow." "Make out the check in my name," Mr. Saga is alleged to have said. "Rand works in my office, and I'll, give It to WBl," s ' ; . , f At any rate, Mr. Rand never got the money. Mr. Sage does not deny he got It. All that he affirmed In his defense was that Mr. Rand was in his employ; that he was well paid for his services; that his time belonged to him; there fore Mr. Rand was not entitled to money from his company. "Uncle Russell" never told Mr. Rand that the directors had voted favorably on his bill. Rand alleges that when he mentioned the little item to Mr. Sage, each time the reply was: "Yes, yea. To be sure, Rand, I naa almost forgotten about it . But you'll get it Don t worry." He continued to work for Mr. Sage and finally wrote to the officers of the Iowa Central, asking why his claim wasn't paid. The answer was that long ago Mr. Sage had received the check. Mr. Rand then confronted Mr. Sage. "That $3,000. What about ltT Tou've bad it for months. Shell out!" "Oh let's see? That's right. Rand. I did get the check and I guess I'll keep It. It wasn't due you; you were working for me 'at the time and getting paid every week." Next day Mr. Rand went hunting for another Job and found one in the presi dency of the Securities Protective as sociation. Then he walked Into - Mr, Sage's office and resigned. ' "Aha, what's your hurry V observed Mr. Sage, with his mollifying smile, "Hope you will reconsider this." "It la useless to talk," said Rand. "I want what Is coming to me, and in addition I want that 13.000. I could have you arrested and could prosecute you criminally. Fay ma or suffer the consequences. Mr. Sage was too full for utterance. Finally he spoke. "Now, Rand," he drawled with ascetlo rigor, "get out of here. You haven't any money com ing, and you ought - to be glad that I have kept you at work. Good day!" , That day Mr. Rand saw a lawyer and a suit was filed. The case was fought and defended with vigor. Mr. Rand gets a verdict not only for the 12,000, but Interest and costs were added. ... The verdict is against the Iowa Cen tral railroad, and as the road has paid the claim its directors look to Mr. Sage for restitution in the event the verdict stands. , MAKY. From the New York Sun. I. The old world's rolling on Beneath Its weight of. years, : Deep covered by the dust of man And watered by his tears. But Mary's omy : . Ten years old, . And Mary's hair Rtpllng gold. is II. Above the patient plains Old Cheops lifts his head. A nation's sombre monument Among Its sleeping dead. But the weary years - - - Might never be -,When Mary looks and ' Smiles at me. ' IIL Old Sorrow stalks abroad, ' And Worry's always here. The Big Blue Devils leap and play, And Trouble's ever' near. a . But all these things Are naught to me, .:: When Mary's sitting On my knee. , PIS N'T WATT TOM OXSXB8. ' From the Chicago News. Senator Hoar says that at a dinner where General Grant and other distin guished men were present Commodore AlUen remarked that there was nothing he disliked more than a subordinate who always obeyed orders. "What is that you are caylng, commodore?" said -President Grant across the table. The com modore repeated' what . he had said. "There is a good deal of truth In what you say," said General Grant. "One of the virtues of General Sheridan was that he knew when to act without orders. Just before the surrender of Lee, Gen eral Sheridan captured some dispatches, from which he learned that Lee had or dered his supplies to a certain place. I was on the other side of the river, where he cjuld get no communication from me until th next morning. General Sheri dan pushed on at once without orders, got to, the place IS minutes before the. rebels and captured the supplies. After the surrender was concluded, the first thing General Lee asked me for was ra tions for his men,. I issued to them the sumo provisions which Sheridan had captured. Now, if Sheridan, as most men would havo done, had waited for orders from mo,' Lee would have got off," HOT SO BIO AS XT X.OOXSD. From the New York World. A naval officer who has just returned from Colombia is showing a check he was given in a restaurant In Cartagena, lie went in one morning and got a cup of coffee and a roll. The waiter gave him" a check for $4,600. i "Good Lord!" spluttered the naval officer, in the best Bpanlsh he knew, "what do you mean by this? ..Mors than four thousand dollars for a cup of coffee! 'It's an out rage.,;;, I can't-pay it and I won't!" The proprietor came around and suavely1 explained that that price was In, Colombian paper currency, for which the ratio that morning was $23,000 to $1 In gold. " The bill was 20 cents lit American money. Russia and England Flaying a Caiae cf Intrije. for Control cf Thibet Eliza R. Scldmore's Fekln Letter in Chi cago Tribune. i.- .: Tibet, the mysterious land of Central Asia, is destined to pass under the con trol of either Russia or England. Al ready the two powers are engaged ; In military and diplomatic intrigue to gain the supremacy In Lhassa, the sealed city of the dalal lama. Russian surveyors, guarded by troops, ; t are ' In Northern Tibet, and are building permanent bar' racks. Apparently they have gone there to stay. The English are assembling a large military - expedition, -which will march perhaps to Lhassa itself in the spring. The game of Intrigue is on, China, the protector of Tibet, Is not only helpless ,. but indifferent. The lamas, themselves are only awakening to the wonders of the modern world, . . The temple, in the far north quarter of Pekln is a dilapidated old place, highly disenchanting, now that the mystery of it and the difficulty of access are in the past. It was formerly the palace of the, prince who became the Emperor Yung Cheng. He endowed It richly and his successors made annual visits, liberal presents and allowances until the year 1900. In that season the lamas took fright and left Pekln for Mongolia, re ducing the company of 800 or 800 pious folk to only 200.' Fortunately for the lamas and the treasures of the temple, that ouarter of the cltv fell to the Jap anese to administer, and there alone the temples were not 'pillaged and used as military quarters, Guards stood at the gates for months before1" the Japanese general visited the temple ' and r was Shown through Us dreary stone courts, its halls of Images, and lecture rooms of priests. i When the tourist had to bribe largely to get In. and pay more and fight des perately to get out, there were torment ing tales of the splendors of the altar ornaments and images, the magnificence, of the successive fonts. One found but dingy quadrangles, dilapidated r build ings, commonplace Images, and, over all, such dust and litter that the effect was depressing. There are some fine old bronte Incense burners of the Kieu Lung period in one court, one good set of altar vessels of the same 'period In cloisonne enamel on one altar, and a painted enamel set of beakers, flower vases, urn, and incense gilded ."Images and the tiny arhats and rakans In the fantastlo rock work para dise of another pavilion are net equal to those In other temples. . The head lama of this temple was cu rious about Buddhism in . Japan, and used to ply bis visitors with many ques tions. Had" they any temples as targe and splendid as this in Japan? Were the altars as richly ' furnished, the priests as many and as well robed and supported In Japan? The Buddhist1 chaplains of Japanese regiments sent word home, and the Hongwaujl temples In Kioto Invited the head lama over as their guest, v He went over with a chaplain on a troopship, 'was entertained at those magnificent temples In Kioto, and at famous temples all the way up to TOKto ana imikko, wo was shown schools, museums, gardens, ar senals, shipyards, and hospitals- In fact. everything in the way of spiritual and material development ' and progress in Japan. It was too late In the summer for the emperor to grant an audience, but . the dased lama was shown through and en tertained In the palace, and when he was to leave Toklo some 800 priests and a great company of :; Japanese officials, military and civil, made a formal fare well at the station. . It was a sight worth, braving an August noonday's heat to see the dull railway ; platform and ' carriages enliv ened by (hose hundreds of superbly glit tering brocade priest closks, and the group of white and gold uniforms. ' - The lama was duly Impressed with Japan's greatness, her higher civiliza tion, and spiritual condition, and he spread the wonderful accounts of his travels far and wide through the region of Lamaism. The lamas, who come in from Tibet and. Mongolia, stay at this temple or the yellow temple outside the walls, and there Is a great going to and fro of the tonsured brethren, i The lama delivered a continuous lecture on the greatness and goodness of Japan to his colleagues and acolytes, and when the court returned to Pekln and the em peror so entirely - : neglected him the chagrined lama could not endure the situation. . Having lost face and lost heart, 'he withdrew to Mongolia, ' seek ing (for consolation the living Buddha at Urge. - - At the Yellow temple, Just north of the city wall, there are many Tibetan lamas, and the Tibetan merchants, who come out, from Lhassa and return there each summer make It a general head quarters. One, most Interesting Tibetan lama was in at the Japanese photog rapher's place the other day the Rev. A. Wau Karasau, a Kotnpo lama, who came a few years ago as an official tribute - bearer from the dalal lama to the Chinese emperor.. This annual tribute is not a serious thing, consisting of carpets, drugs and Incense only, since the money tribute prayers and . masses for the special prayers . and masses which the Tibetans offer up for the wel fare of China, The Kompo lama was a stalwart old soul, with a strong and kindly face, with a red button of -rank in the yellow crown of his turban hat, and while he sat for the photographer to make ready for him, he ladled snuff out from a lit tle silver and turquoise stoppered bot tle to the side of his thumb and sniffed it vigorously. He told me that ha liked pekln better than Lhassa, and he also told me that in 1800 a Burlat Mongol came to Lhassa and excited the lamas with the news that the Chinese em pire had fallen and that the Chinese em peror had fled. The lamas had been told Of a war at the time the boxers began operations, and had been asked to pray for the success of Chinese arms. : There was. great consternation, and the Burlat easily persuaded the chief of ficials and many lamas to sign a paper asking Russia to protect the Tibetans. Then soma merchants arrived direct from Pekln and brought word that the government . of China still lived, that Imperial proclamations were posted on the walls as usual, that the emperor was In Shansi, to be sure, but Prince Chlng and LI Hung Chang were in Pekln and' had driven away all but a few foreigners. The angry lamas turned upon the burlat In wrath and he fled to Mongolia. As to recent foreign travelers In Tibet and Lhassa,. there have been Rus sian surveyors in the north part of Tibet for f year, but the lama said the only foreigner actually In Lhassa was a Jo pun e e doctor, who studied the sacred books for a year in Sera university and suddenly disappeared. It was not until this doctor wrote back letters i from Nepad that all Lhassa learned that a Japanese had .been In their midst- un suspected for all that time..' The merchants who came up from Lhassa this June had many stories to tell about this, Japanese doctor, and the Kompo lama was a little dosed when we cried out that all the world knew all fbout him--tho ; famous ; priest, Ekal Kawaguchl, whoa travels In Tibet and long tay In Lhassa 'ha ve been the talk of Japan for some months. Since all other travelers after Abbe Hue had failed to enter Lhassa. it re mained for a Japanese to attempt it and succeed. The priest Kawaguchl. went on a purely religious errand, his object being to see and search for , certain Buddhist writings, supposed to be treasured In the great temple of Tibet He spent a year in India. NStudylng Tibetan, some months in Nepal and on the Tibetan border, and a year traveling western xiDet oerore he ventured into the capital. . , ,., Representing himself ' as a Chlneso doctor, he had great vogue among the dropsical, . whom he was able to, cure. One of his grateful patients, the .minis ter of flnanco, took him into his house, and under his proteotlon the doughty Japanese continued his' Sanskrit and Tibetan studies at the great lama uni versity attached to the Sera temple, . , Kawaguchl had an audience with the grand lama, who offered him a position as one of the court physicians. Some Tibetan merchants from Darjlllng recog. nlsed Kawaguchl in Lhassa, but before they could follow and denounce him he fled for the.' Indian frontier with his horse load of saered books. It was not until he wrote back to his friends in Lhassa that the mystery of his disap pearance was explained, and it was a sensation cf many months when the lamas learned that a foreigner had been living among them for so long. , ' Chinese are permitted to go and come freely in Tibet, and also the Burlat Mon gols, although they are now under Rus sian domination and their country a province of Siberia. All other travelers are warned oft. held at bay by Tibetan soldiers, and refused provisions and pack animals until they turn back. Ptejeval sky's, expedition, which was more truly a diplomatic than a scientific mission, was turned back as relentlessly as any other, and the. presents Intended to ce ment the friendship of the czar and the grand lama were abandoned In the sno wastes. ," ' , ' Russia has not rested during these 33 years since Prejevalsky failed. If Eu ropean Russians could not succeed, Asl- -atlo Russians might do so, and the Burlat Mongols were made much of. Promising young Burlats were educated In Russia, and the' Burlat of whom the Tibetan lama told me might well have been the Zoubikov who In his lecture before European geographical societies says that he resided in Lhassa for a few months during 1900. The tutor of the dalal lama In his minority was a Burlat Mongol, WHO Since his return to his own country has been made much of by the Russians, and has several times gone back to Lhassa and made rich presents to the different uni versities and temples and higher officials. Presents more wonderful than anything the lamas dreamed of before hare come from Russia, and one of the dalal lama's chamberlains went : to St. Petersburg to thank the czar, and to make a secret compact with the ciar. , All the efforts of the Russian emis saries have been to thoroughly alarm the Tibetans as to the Intentions of Eng land in India. Until the year 1900 the Tibetans were secure in the belief that China would always protect them. Since then the Russians have besought the lamas to lean on them, and have painted the English bogey in more ; terrible colors. The present expedition, : which" Lord Curson and Lord Kitchener are organ izing to make rapid advances in the spring, has already spread' panic , in Lhassa, and there will be great news when the next lot of Tibetans come into Pekln. . , By imperial edict last May the em press dowager bade the Tibetans receive the English expedition kindly, and Indi rectly warned them that if they put obstacles in the way or 'made trouble, they need not look to China to help them in their straits. By the wording of the edict China atave notice that she would not be responsible for any rep rehensible conduct of the Tibetans, that Tibet was none of her concern, and that the lamas must look out for themselves. During the summer Lhassa made com plaint Of the Russian surveyors and en gineers accompanied by troops, who were going where they pleased in northern Tibet, and the lamas were curtly advised to chase them out, to drive them across the borders of Mongolia. ;.;.. Poor Tibet and Its problems. Its timid ity, blindness and weakness, its inability to distinguish between the wolf and the lamb, and Its certainty of doing the wrong thing in the end. about parallels Cores, which so long leaned on China also. Tibet is dependent on India for Its most necessary supplies, and there is an increasing trade over the border at Dar jlllng. Although China hast for ages furnished the brick tea of the Tibetans from the Yangtse valley, much tea now goes from India, together with all the cotton goods they consume, much bar ley and foodstuffs. When Mr; and Mrs. George Ltttledale were held In enmp only 40 miles from Lhassa they sent In for supplies and the tobacco was in tins from Bristol, England, the matches came from Japan, and some other things had been made In Germany, While no foreigners are permitted to cross the boundary, Tibetans go back and ,A,(h Aal,r. ThBr la .a. iinhnnl for Tibetan boys at Darjlllng, maintained at government expense, and many of the graduates have taken positions as teach ers and surveyors and clerks In 'India. ih. niinth., nt Tlhatttn frariiintftai from this school, the Tibetan traders who ' regularly visit Darjlllng and the coolies who work in the tea plantations for a , season and return, all help spread the advantages of England's ways and gov- .The Russian emissaries have' worked upon, won over end showered their gifts upon the lamas and higher officials. The Tibetans themselves would welcome the English, the officials would oppose them at the prompting of the Ruslans, so that there Is every prospect of an in ternal Struggle when the affairs of Tibet become a matter of world's Interest. . These are stirring times, mis is a strenuous century, that Eastern Asia : fln.la horaelf - thi-iint . Into. Rptter a. longer sleep than such a fevered awak ening, some of the poor old easy going peoples must think. , , . WET ALX.ISOH MISSED XT, From the Washington Post. -. Senator Allison of Iowa, .famed for his conservatism and his compromises, was at a dinner party a few nights ago. Along in the evening, after the game had been served and the glasses filled several times, an admirer of the senator came ever to him,, put his hand on the senatorial shoulder and said, between sobs: . ' ' "Alllsoni if- you had ever In your life hit a man a good stiff punch in the slats and called him ont of his name a few times you 'would have been presi dent of the United States," , . Philanthropic After All. Charley Schwab shows a disposition to do the right thing, He has a lot of stock which he Is willing to surrender1 If lie can get the price quoted when the stock came into his possession,